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Tuesday, March 17, 2020

How to Be Awesome at Quarantine with Kids Part 3

This post contains affiliate links for your convenience.

Previously, we talked about eight ingredients that we can use to help fill our days while we are social distancing at home.  Here are some specific activities for most of those categories to help get you started.  I tried to find easy, no or low prep options that you can do with whatever supplies you have at home.


Academics

  • Flash Cards
  • Sudoku
  • Crossword Puzzles
  • Workbooks
  • Rhyming/Matching/Opposites Games
  • Board Games like Candy Land, Chutes and Ladders, Solitare, Scrabble, etc.  My kids especially love the Richard Scary Busytown Game.
  • Pick an animal, sport, historical figure, country, etc. that they are interested in and research it together
  • Spelling Games
  • Keep a Journal or Video Diary
  • If you have a chalkboard, write spelling words or letters on there and let your child "paint" them off with a paintbrush and water.
Reading

As I mentioned before, reading with your child or setting aside time for them to read independently is probably the most important thing you could do during these next few weeks.  You can find free audiobooks on podcast apps or rent them from your library through Libby or Hoopla if available.  There are also some on Spotify, Pandora, and YouTube.  See my last post for some recommendations.

Gross Motor
  • Masking/Painter's tape works well on hard floors.  Make shapes or lines and have them try to walk along the tape without "falling" off.
  • Tape crepe paper streamers at angles through a hallway and have kids bob and weave their way through the "laser field."
  • Simple songs like the Hokey Pokey or Father Abraham can get kids moving.  Or put on some music and have a dance party!
  • Obstacle courses can be made indoor or outside.  Masking tape, pillows, and pool noodles can be used in surprising ways to create obstacles inside!
  • "Heavy Work" chores can be a surprising source of gross motor activities.  Have small children pull all the cushions off the couch and help you vacuum it, then replace the cushions.  Help (and supervise) them climb on a step stool to dust the top of a shelf or table.  For older kids, vacuuming, dusting, scrubbing, etc. double as housework and gross motor!
Fine Motor for Young Children
  • Have children paint some sticks from your yard and then when they dry, tie some ribbons on them.  Put them in a vase for a colorful centerpiece.
  • Put different kinds of paper, TP tubes, ribbon, etc. in a box with a pair of scissors and let them practice cutting!  (Stay close and make sure to supervise this one!)
  • Put sticker dots (or just draw them) on a page and have your child connect the dots with a pencil, crayon, or marker.  
  • Lacing cards are available to print online, or you might have some from Target.
  • Give them strips of fabric or ribbon to thread through the holes of a laundry basket, chain link fence, chicken wire, or anything else with holes big enough.  
  • Playdough!  Have them roll snakes and then cut them with scissors, roll different size balls, make shapes or letters, etc.
  • I have a whole Pinterest board full of more great ideas for fine motor activities here.
  • Coloring books and mazes like this one are a hit with my four year old
  • Both of my kids have really enjoyed these foam mosaic craft kits

Fine Motor for Older Children
  • Rainbow looms and weaving looms are great for more advanced fine motor practice.

  • Paracord bracelets, macrame, and friendship bracelets

  • Simple cross stitch or sewing projects

  • Adult coloring books or printable pages

  • Spirographs

  • Finger knitting
Art
  • The more open ended the art, the better.  Put a bunch of supplies on the table and see where they go with it.
  • Mirror painting or bathtub painting are fun alternatives to the usual.
  • Magazine collages
  • Stamps, foam stickers, or stencils
  • Directed drawing activities give step by step instructions.  Do one with your child and hang them up together when you finish!
  • Watercolor pencils are a fun and less messy way to paint.  You draw with them like regular colored pencils and then paint over them with water.  Or dip them in water and see how different they write!

  • Kwik Stix are tempera paint sticks that make painting less messy and easier for young children to control.

Music

This one is easy to incorporate into other activities simultaneously.  
  • Play classical music during art time or while coloring and knitting.  There are plenty of playlists on Pandora, Spotify, or YouTube.
  • Play upbeat music for a dance party or while doing an obstacle course.
  • Play name that tune with Disney songs or whatever your family listens to.
  • Let your kids do their own cover of their favorite song and make a video.  
  • Pull out some pots and pans, your old recorder, or whatever else you can turn into instruments and have a jam session.
Sensory

This wasn't one of my eight categories but it's worth listing because a lot of food items typically used for sensory boxes aren't available right now.  So here is a list of common sensory box fillers that aren't food.  I'm not saying go buy any of this specifically, but maybe it will give you new ideas. (Use caution and supervise young children to prevent eating or choking, of course.)
  • Shredded paper (even better if you have a shredder and they can watch you make it)
  • Marbles
  • Bingo Dots
  • Pompoms
  • Buttons
  • Flower petals or other nature items from your yard
  • Cotton Balls
  • Cut Up Straws (let them cut up the straws first!)
  • Easter Grass
  • Cut Up Foam
  • Bird Seed
  • Fake Snow
  • Glass Gems (used as vase fillers in hobby stores and Dollar Tree)
  • Aquarium Rocks
  • Water Beads
  • Soapy Water
  • Poker Chips
  • Rainbow Loom Bands
  • Yarn, Ribbon, and Fabric Strips
  • Feathers
  • Beads
Housework

I know, I know.  Sometimes it's more work to get them to "help" than to just do the work itself.  Think of it more as an activity than actually helping. I'm pretty sure if you have older kids, you know what they can do, but here are some ideas for young children.
  • Wash doorknobs and baseboards with baby wipes.
  • Sweep with a small broom
  • Dust with a feather duster or a dry washcloth
  • Wipe down bathroom counters with a baby wipe
  • Put toys on shelves
  • Fold washcloths and match socks
  • Set the table with help
  • Wipe the table before or after a meal
  • Put bib/pj's/clothes in hamper
I hope this gives you some ideas to get you started!  Please don't see this is as a list to work through from beginning to end.  I am just throwing out a whole bunch of ideas so that hopefully a few of them click with someone.

Next post, I will describe my themes for our "Spring Break Quarantine Camp."

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